Pastors Who Lack Close Friends: 5 Reasons Why
by
Barna Research discovered that 61% of pastors are lonely and have few close friends. The loneliest people in churches are often pastors. Why is this so?
The experts say that five key factors inhibit pastors from developing close friendships.
- lack of formative modeling: in families of origin some weren’t close to their parents and/or their parents never modeling for them how to create intimate relationships.
- some pastors developed a loner tendency: they’d rather be alone.
- personality: some personalties can unintentionally push people away.
- wounds from the past can compel some to put up walls with others.
- fear of sharing loneliness with others: some pastors think that if people knew they struggled, hurt, or had problems, it might lessen the respect they would give and therefore hinder that pastor’s leadership effectiveness.
Number five can be very powerful. Certainly
we shouldn’t publicly display all our dirty laundry, or we would
diminish our influence. But actually I’ve found that when I have
appropriately shared my struggles with others, most people endear
themselves to me and respect me even more.
I’ll never forget a story I heard Bill
Hybels share years ago in a conference. The specific details are hazy,
but the impact on me remains.
On one of his study breaks he told about a Sunday night visit to a small church. After the sermon, the pastor stood before his flock and in tears shared a heartbreak he had experienced from his son. He said he felt like a failure and wasn’t sure what to do. He then closed the service. Spontaneously the people rushed to the front and surrounded him, hugged him, and wept with him. Bill then used a term to describe the scene: “the circle of brokenness.” As he drew thousands of us into this story, with misty eyes I realized that every pastor yearns for that kind of acceptance.
If fear of rejection, looking less like a
pastor, or worry that you might diminish your influence keeps you from
inviting safe people in, realize the danger in which you can put
yourself. Without safe people, ministry can overwhelm us.
A psychologist friend of mine once
explained that isolation can set up a pastor on a slippery slope toward
sexual compromise. In isolation, Satan can exploit his vulnerability.
He can then begin to compromise and live a secret sexual life that may
ultimately lead to ministry and/or marriage failure. My friend reminded
me that sin grows easiest in the darkness.
So, if you are a pastor, don’t minimize the
importance of friends in the ministry and in your church. Push through
your loneliness and find some friends.
What other factors have you seen that can create loneliness in pastors?
Related posts:
No comments:
Post a Comment